Geoengineering: The Most Important Technology Nobody’s Heard Of

In a breakout session here at Techonomy, David Keith of the
University of Calgary and Margaret Leinen of the Climate Response Fund led a discussion of the prospect of geoengineering the climate—in other words,
engaging in some type of deliberate intervention to alter the planet and
thereby counteract global warming.

The reason scientists and policymakers are increasingly
thinking about geoengineering is clear: Major climate change now looks
increasingly unstoppable. As Leinen put it, even if the proposals on the table
at Copenhagen had been adopted, we’d still end the century with an atmospheric
carbon dioxide of 700 parts per million--more than enough to cause climate upheaval, raise seas dramatically, and so forth.

So it seems clear that if
we can’t cut emissions, at some point we’ll be forced to consider a more
radical alternative, at least if we want to preserve a planet anything
like the one our species evolved on.

And as it happens, geoengineering does indeed appear to be
on offer. According to Keith, the most popular and prominent idea for doing it—injecting
sulfur particles into the stratosphere that would reflect sunlight away from the
Earth, thereby causing a global cooling—could be begun almost immediately. “You
could do this with current technology now,” Keith said, and he estimates that
moreover, you could do so for about $ 1 billion a year. “Venice could pay to do
it based solely on real estate prices,” said Keith.

Geoengineering would also kick in quickly--though you’d have
to keep putting the stuff up there if you wanted to keep having the climate
payoff. It wouldn’t, Keith emphasizes, solve all the problems of climate change. For instance, a
planetary cooling would not do anything to counteract the ongoing ocean
acidification that is being driven by our carbon emissions. Geoengineering doesn’t make those
emissions go away, it just makes the planet chill down a little.

Most of all, we don’t really know the full range
of possible side effects—the unintended consequences. And we won't before we
use it. But if we’re in a climate corner, we might just go ahead anyway. We
might think geoengineering is the best of our bad options.

The presentations by Leinen and Keith launched a broad
ranging discussion, but sitting in the room, there was a fundamental theme I couldn’t
stop thinking of—the incredible gap between the importance of geoengineering as
a possibility on the one hand, and the complete lack of public awareness that
it’s even on the table on the other.

On the first front, Keith put it like this: “Geoengineering
is like nuclear weapons in forcing us to totally rethink the relationship between
nations and governments. It is that big of a game changer.” Indeed, unilateral geoengineering
attempts could conceivably spark wars between countries.

And yet recent polling data suggests that only about 1
percent of Americans currently know what geoengineering even is. It is, Keith
emphasized, a “dangerous moment”—a radical idea is on the table and getting
serious attention from scientists, but the public is nowhere in the discussion.
That’s a situation that needs to change, and hopefully before some type of climate crisis comes along and forces the
issue.

Comments

To propose injecting sulfuric oxide into the atmosphere, when so much effort and cost has historically been expended to eliminate the acid rain caused by sulfur emissions, patently shows the misguided developments and consequences that climate change alarmism can produce.

When you say "climate change looks increasingly unstoppable", you have encapsulated your beliefs into an ironic Moebius strip type of assertion. Climate has always been changing, with high and low extremes long before humans cultivated cattle or began using fossil fuels. Climate change is unstoppable in the sense that the dynamic and complex system of the Earth and its climate is beyond the direct control of humans.

I suspect that I am not going to affect your *beliefs* about 'global warming' in the space of a short paragraph -- that is perhaps for another day, when and if time and willingness would support an open and objective discussion. Hopefully your allegiance and support of truly objective and scientific principles will allow you to re-examine some of your assumptions, or at least reconsider the subject.

But suffice to say that to entertain pumping acid-rain-generating pollutants into the atmosphere to somehow 'geoengineer' away a 'problem' that is still a hypothesis and not a proven causal relationship by any stretch clearly reflects the real downside of climate change alarmism.

They're not "beliefs" about global warming. I've reported for many years on the science and am thoroughly aware of scientists' state of understanding and their confidence in their conclusions. Humans are causing global warming through greenhouse gas emissions and it is happening now. That's not a belief--it's a report on the state of scientific understanding.

I realize that you have reported on the climate change debate in the past. For example, in your column in The Nation last year, "Unpopular Science", you present your thoughts on climate change in the course of describing the attrition in the state of science journalism in the mainstream media.

In that column, you write well about the important topic of science journalism, and the unfortunate waning of resources and qualified talent devoted to conveying popular understanding and assessments of topics grounded in science.

However, you do err in one significant instance: you have chosen to take a political, and not a scientific, stance vis-a-vis the controversial topic of 'global warming'.

The system of the Earth's climate is about as complex a dynamic system that one could imagine, and there is no simple field of "climate science", as the phenomenon involves so many scientific disciplines that it would take experts from a dozen or more fields to even begin to have a comprehensive investigation of the subject.

When you support "consensus" as a basis for scientific legitimacy, you are abandoning the principles of science, which above all relies upon demonstrable and incontrovertible evidence in the observed and observable universe to support a theory, however elegant and or intriguing a theory may be.

I mention this not merely to raise the specter of 'unable to be proven' simply to counter the hypothesis of 'global warming' -- even though it is quite true that the theory in question -- that amplified negative feedback in the Earth's climate brought about by increased levels of CO2 will cause exponential and catastrophic changes in the state of the Earth in mere decades -- is still completely unproven, and, for decades to come, unprovable.

Rather, I of course agree that studying the climate of the Earth is a very important topic of scientific investigation and study -- just that computer models (and selective statistical graphics) do not a demonstrable proof make.

You are quite right to consider climate change theories. Where you cross the line is to deride and ridicule the legitimate efforts of scientists to debate, discuss, and yes, to disagree with the theory of imminent and dire climate change caused solely by the increase of CO2 in the atmosphere contributed to by human activity.

When you write "The mass media, however, ...(bowing to pressure from special interests and their pet scientists, who strategically attacked the scientific consensus)" you are adopting the belief system, not the science, of those who would defend the theory simply by attacking those who disagree.

Science is not about 'consensus', nor something to be voted on by a majority. Galileo, Copernicus, Einstein -- these scientists were the opposite of 'consensus' -- they were stand-alone radicals who bucked the 'consensus' of the day.

Your own un-scientific bias is further revealed when you characterize Anthony Watts challenges to "mainstream understanding of climate change" as a "misinformation machine".

A misinformation machine ?? Come now.

That is not objective science journalism -- you are clearly showing what you have come to believe. It is certainly fine for you to have adopted the opinions and views of your choosing -- each and every one of us has that right. But when your reporting on the topic indicates your choice by clearly dismissing the analysis of one side of the debate as being somehow illegitimate, you are no longer a science journalist -- as difficult a fence as that is to ride with regards to this subject in particular.

It is perhaps natural that you might see challenges to a theory that you have chosen to personally accept to be some kind of hypocritical propaganda motivated by other-than-scientific factors. However, you unnecessarily and unfairly smear honest science by doing so and seek to adopt the mantle of 'science judge' when you, as a journalist, can make such pronouncements regarding this scientific debate.

Although you may not see it, *believing* in a 'global warming consensus' is a stone's throw from other culturally-propagated beliefs, many of which advanced and adamantly argued by the likes of conspiracy theorists in a number of facets of life.

I would urge you, as a science journalist, to not have such a closed mind (and condescending attitude) when it comes to the legitimate debate over theories of climate change. Even though your adopted position might be thought to be 'popular', your treatment of the subject detracts from the many other areas in which your analysis and commentary are quite valid and valuable.

I would be more than willing to discuss the subject with you further should it be of interest.

But, again to the specific point: how on Earth can you think that the notion of pumping acid-rain-inducing sulfur oxide into the atmosphere can in any way be a proposal that is reasonable to consider ?